The Foundations of Leninism

Lectures delivered at the Sverdlov University

Paperback, 128 pages

Published July 15, 1975 by Foreign Language Press.

OCLC Number:
3526567

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The book describes the theory and the tactics of Leninism. Not the basis of Marxism on which it relies, but the new developments of Leninism. Stalin denies that Leninism is a purely Russian phenomenon or just the application of Marxism to Russian conditions, instead explains how Leninism is the response of the proletarian movement to imperialism, which hadn't yet developed in Marx's and Engels's time. While he notes Lenin's fight against the revisionists of the II. International, he also denies that Lenin only revived revolutionary Marxism. He emphasizes Leninism as a step forward, an advancement of Marxism. In the first chapter — "Historical Roots of Leninism" — he summarizes the contradictions of imperialism and explains how the Leninist movement could form in Russia despite it not being a classical imperialist country. This is because Russia was the centre of all kinds of oppression: the Russian people were exploited both by …

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